Requirements Modeling & Analysis is one of the most important and often most neglected activities of the software development life cycle. A good requirements model fosters communication between the business and IT by enabling them to share a common vision of the system's solution prior to implementation. This will ensure that the systems meets the business needs, can be delivered on time, and have the level of quality and flexibility to easily accommodate future business needs.
This workshop will provide your team with the practical skills necessary to effectively, and efficiently capture, model and analyze user-centric requirements with Use Cases. Your will leave understanding how to communicate better with business experts, systems analysts, designers and developers, and create Use Case-driven user-centric requirements which naturally translate into system designs.
You will learn how to identify and translate business goals and needs into system features, and use them to derive both functional and nonfunctional (technical) system requirements. You will learn how to effectively apply Use Cases. This workshop will also provide guidance on how to avoid the common difficulties that teams experience when starting a project with Use Cases, such as capturing the right level of detail and the complexities involved with applying and managing use cases.
Business and system analysts, project managers, business experts, and anyone who needs to learn how to effectively capture, communicate and manage user-centric requirements.
Lecture, illustrated with many examples, will present the information that you need to know in just-in-time fashion. Learning is further reinforced while you work on carefully selected real-world case studies and sequence of exercises, which incorporate the core concepts presented in the workshop. There is a 60% - 40% split between lecture and exercises. This is a Learning Optimization ProgramTM Workshop. how the requirements that you produce are used to design and develop systems
Prior analysis experience is helpful, but not required.
" The use case and object-oriented thinking versus traditional flowcharting was really eye-opening. "
- R.H., Engineer, Honda of America
" Very enjoyable and informative course "
- J.F., Director of IS, Healthsource
" Highly dedicated, interested, knowledgeable instructor who gave a sense of urgency and desire to learn more. "
- C.S., Operations Analyst, MediaOne
" Excellent material. The instructor has a superior knowledge of a wide area of topics. "
- C.P., Senior Business Effectiveness Consultant, TransCanada Pipeline
" The course was truly remarkable "
- V.D., Project Manager, Universal Systems
" We leave feeling we have gained a significant level of knowledge. We're glad we came. "
- T.B., Manager, Samson Companies